Hospital staff must swear off Tylenol, Tums to get religious vaccine exemption
Source: ARS Technica
A hospital system in Arkansas is making it a bit more difficult for staff to receive a religious exemption from its COVID-19 vaccine mandate. The hospital is now requiring staff to also swear off extremely common medicines, such as Tylenol, Tums, and even Preparation H, to get the exemption.
The move was prompted when Conway Regional Health System noted an unusual uptick in vaccine exemption requests that cited the use of fetal cell lines in the development and testing of the vaccines.
Read more: https://arstechnica.com/science/2021/09/hospital-staff-must-swear-off-tylenol-tums-to-get-religious-vaccine-exemption/
Hard to search on my phone. Mods please delete or lock if a dupe.
Good to see hospitals take a stand. More of this please.
OAITW r.2.0
(24,737 posts)Enjoy their recommendations.
50 Shades Of Blue
(10,085 posts)Delphinus
(11,845 posts)There would be no accountability on this.
Thomas Hurt
(13,903 posts)and heal or cure you...wtf are you working in a hospital? That is a religious exemption. That you don't like the covid vaccine cuz it is filthy socialism is not.
jmowreader
(50,580 posts)The researchers used a cell line that derives from an abortion performed in Holland in the 1970s to test the vaccines.
Mr. Evil
(2,863 posts)would only last until they got sick enough to be admitted as a Covid patient. Anytime after that if they thought that slaughtering a live baby and drenching themselves in its blood would save their life they'd be all for it. I loathe these people.
I apologize for being a bit graphic but, I've had my fill of their hypocrisy and their phony religious bullshit. They are putting unwitting people at great and grave risk, especially children too young to be vaccinated.
LiberalFighter
(51,263 posts)Tommymac
(7,263 posts)NYC Liberal
(20,138 posts)They're okay with other people dying.
Klondike Kat
(810 posts)so it was just another way to "pwn the libs".
IronLionZion
(45,615 posts)They would definitely deport him for his socialist radical speeches
DallasNE
(7,404 posts)With Jacobsen v. Massachusetts.
orleans
(34,094 posts)"Individual right must sometimes give way to 'common good', Harlan wrote. Jacobson argued that the smallpox vaccination law not only infringed on his religious liberty but also was arbitrary and capricious. The Court disagreed, writing that Jacobson's individual right must give way to the common good. Jun 3, 2020
https://www.mtsu.edu/first-amendment/article/1824/jacobson-v-massachusetts
dflprincess
(28,091 posts)Jacobson is a 1905 case.
orleans
(34,094 posts)Alien Life Form
(370 posts)believers can handle poison snakes and will not die..please put on a demonstration of your faith
keithbvadu2
(37,011 posts)It's a hard way to find out who is not a true believer.
PatSeg
(47,711 posts)Most common medications appear to have been tested and/or developed using the HEK-293 fetal cell line. Advil, Aleve, Sudafed, Benadryl, Claritin, Robitussin, Mucinex, Maalox, Ex-Lax, Pepto-Bismol, Lipitor, Albuterol, just to mention a few. Basically anyone looking to refuse the vaccine on religious grounds, probably needs to clean out their entire medicine cabinet.
Oops!
intrepidity
(7,346 posts)That may get their attention.
PatSeg
(47,711 posts)Oh absolutely! Time to find a new religion.
dflprincess
(28,091 posts)would be working in a hospital. You would think accepting even a support staff position would be aiding & abetting sin.
LiberalArkie
(15,733 posts)keithbvadu2
(37,011 posts)Maybe a religious exemption from quarantine for someone with a contagious disease attending their services?
You can't deny my right to worship!
???
Some kids still get mumps, measles, chicken pox.
Bring 'em to church.
KY_EnviroGuy
(14,498 posts)That was taboo in the Southern Baptist church I was raised in. Same with shopping on Sundays and pre-marital sex.
Weekly prayer sessions in sackcloth and ashes would be further proof of their faith to seal the deal.
KY...........
PoindexterOglethorpe
(25,926 posts)Be consistent, if you're claiming religious exemption.
In the real world, I think the only religion opposed to medical stuff is Christian Science. And everyone here really should read God's Perfect Child by Caroline Fraser.
It's an absolutely amazing account of Christian Science.
Oh, and her more recent book, Prairie Fires, the American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder is perhaps the very best book I have ever read in a long life of vociferous reading.
Jon King
(1,910 posts)This seems pretty worthless. Simpler to just require them to pay for frequent testing. Sooner or later the financial hit would make them more likely to get the vaccine.
in2herbs
(2,947 posts)that were developed using stem cells, etc., they'll have to rely on herbal and other alternative medicines. Even as progressive and democratic as DU is supposed to be, having to use herbal or other alternative meds is a bridge too far.
If more companies did this is there a religiously held beliefs challenge in the future that will seek to make the USSC redefine it's definition it gave to right-wingers, such as Hobby Lobby, the right to claim their religiously held beliefs, without evidence of anything but their claim?
Karma13612
(4,555 posts)To the expense of drug testing them?
I can see them not allowing any hospital-based pharmacy dispensing and selling them these drugs, or they might go so far as telling any hospital-based physicians that they cannot prescribe these meds to these patients
but short of these extreme measures, I just dont see this doing anything.
Force a lie detector once a week? I mean, this is a joke.
maxsolomon
(33,449 posts)they will have to attest to not using any medicines tested using that stem cell line - since that's their objection to the CV19 vaccines.
no one's going to test them for tums, but an attestation is a signed document. you're basically swearing you're telling the truth.
that is supposed to mean something, even in 2021.